Amussu + Director Q&A (CTBA 18)
Exeter Climate Conference
Tue 01 Jul 2025
Category
Other Information
CTBA 18
Price
£9 | £7 Members | £5 Students & Under 25s*
Time
6.30pm
Tue 01 Jul 2025
Other Information
CTBA 18
Price
£9 | £7 Members | £5 Students & Under 25s*
Time
6.30pm
Dir. Nadir Buhmouch
2019 | 99 mins | Morocco, Qatar | Berber languages with English Subtitles
The people living in the Moroccan village of Imider may be living alongside the biggest silver mine in Africa, but they aren’t reaping any benefits from it. In reality, the factory’s proximity makes their lives even more precarious. The mining activities have led to water scarcity, so while the silver producer is filling its pockets, the village is being literally sucked dry—at least it was until 2011, when local people sabotaged a pipeline to save their plantations.
Several years later, a protest camp has been established around the pipeline, as the villagers continue to suffer at the hands of industry and the local authorities. Violence and arrests are par for the course, but director Nadir Bouhmouch concentrates on the atmosphere of quiet resolve at the protest camp, where major concerns about the future are part of everyday life. “We don’t even know if we exist in the eyes of the government,” remarks an elderly man.
Nowadays, music and theatre are used in new and more peaceful forms of protest. While it doesn’t look like the anonymous forces are going to yield anytime soon, this resilient community isn’t planning to back down, either.
This screening will be preceded by a short film ABIGAIL’S AN ACTIVIST NOW (Dir. Micha Colombo, 14 mins).
The event will be followed by an Q&A panel event with Director Nadir Buhmouch (Amussu) on Zoom, Micha Colombo (Abigail’s An Activist Now) in person, and a member of the Royal Society for the Arts, who are partnering with the Exeter Climate Forum. The panel will be hosted by Professor Will Higbee, University of Exeter.
The Exeter Climate Forum brings together world-leading climate researchers, businesses, policymakers and young people, to shape and engage with the priorities for COP30 and beyond. Set in the stunning Devon countryside, this week of activities are designed to connect and inspire through bold ideas, discussion, and social events.